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Fact Archive for April 2001

 

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How did that silent "b" get into the word "debt?"

I always had my doubts about silent letters, especially when
a teacher offered to help me remember them with a mnemonic. 
Trying to get the spelling of "debt" right made me feel
particularly dumb. In that I may have had something in common with the people of thirteenth century England, who
couldn't leave well enough alone.

You see the word, which came into English with the Norman
Conquest two centuries earlier, was originally spelled "det." 
It came from the French word, "dette," meaning, well, you
know. In jolly Olde England they just loped off the last "e"
and totaled one of the "t's."  So far, I like it.

But then the pedants got at it. They did a little research,
discovered that the French word came from the Latin,
"debita," and in the thirteenth century upgraded the English
version. For kids learning spelling, it's been tough going
ever since.

Source: DICTIONARY OF WORD AND PHRASE Origins by William and Mary Morris


Didja Know...
The days between October 4 and October 15, 1582 did not "exist," they were skipped, due to a decree from Pope Gregory XIII, who changed the official calendar from the Julian model to the Gregorian.
(Source: funtrivia.com)


How do spacewalking astronauts stay warm (or cool)?

The environment of space is one of the most punishing that humans have ever entered.  In sunlight the temperature can rise to 120 degrees Celsius (250 F), while in the shade it can get as cold as -150 Celsius (-250 F).

To keep their human occupants comfortable, modern space suits are marvels of high-tech design.  The astronaut's entire body is surrounded by 90 meters of water-filled plastic tubing (295 feet).
The water circulates through a device in the suit's backpack called a sublimator, where heat is removed by evaporating some of the water.

Since the sunny side of the astronaut is so much warmer than the shadow side, the water tube layer is surrounded by a layer of insulating aluminized mylar, along with several other layers
designed to hold in the pressure of the suit's pure oxygen
atmosphere and to protect against the impact of micrometeoroids.

More about space suit design:
http://vesuvius.jsc.nasa.gov/er/seh/suitnasa.html
http://quest.arc.nasa.gov/space/teachers/suited/5emu1.html
http://spaceboy.nasda.go.jp/note/Yujin/E/yuj108_suits_e.html

How the cooling technology of space suits helps MS victims:
http://www.kron.com/nc4/use/stories/spacesuit.html

A new kind of robot will fly with astronauts soon:
http://features.LearningKingdom.com/fact/archive/2000/08/31.html


Why is caviar so expensive?

What makes a tin of this stuff possibly the most expensive six-letter answer in a crossword puzzle ("champagne and _ _ _ _ _ _ ")? It has to do with simple old economics. Caviar is relatively scarce and difficult to process. 

The sturgeon, from which true caviar comes, takes from 8 to 15 years to mature. This ain't no chicken that keeps on giving. Maturity is the only point at which the eggs can be harvested. You catch the fish, cut it open and take the eggs. 
At every step, the eggs must be slowly hand-processed by an expert, who can tell just how much salt to add. Bad eggs, with an off-smell or color, must be thrown out, sometimes significantly diminishing the total harvest.

So what will it be, Beluga on toast points or the down payment on a Lexus? 

Source: HOW DO THEY DO THAT? By Caroline Sutton



Didja Know...
Termites eat wood twice as fast when listening to heavy metal music?
(Source: funtrivia.com)


Okey dokey

It's a hard life and a tough world, so when nature itself
provides soothing reassurance that all is well, we should be
grateful. The source of this reassuring message is found in a
lizard native to Southeast Asia. It's the bluish-gray, red-
spotted gecko, whose call on quiet evenings can be heard
quite distinctly: "TO-kay! TO-kay!"

If it's TO-kay with you, it's TO-kay with me.

Source: JUST CURIOUS JEEVES



Why do men have Adam's apples?

In asking this question, most people aren't interested in
what the function of the Adam's apple is, just why men have
them and women don't. Unfortunately, the answer to that
isn't very interesting: women do have Adam's apples,
they're just usually smaller than men's and tend to be
hidden by fat in the neck.

Now that we've established the Adam's apple as an equal
opportunity body part, we can explore why it's there in the
first place. Officially known as the "thyroid cartilage",
the plates of the Adam's apple make up the front and side
walls of the larynx. The rigid structure of the Adam's
apple helps to support and protect the delicate vocal
chords that lay inside the larynx. It's men's longer vocal
chords that give them larger Adam's apples and deeper
voices.

(Main Source: THE BOOK OF TOTALLY USELESS INFORMATION By Don Vorhees)


Are some people really double-jointed?

Almost all of us have known someone who was the hit of the
party when they pulled their fingers back to their wrists
or bent their legs behind their heads. Although we refer to
these people as double-jointed, in reality no one truly has
double joints.

Contortionists are actually able to stretch the fibrous
tissues known as ligaments. As strong as rope, ligaments
hold organs in place and fasten bones together. Ligaments
normally restrict the movements of certain joints, but some
folks find that their ligaments are more flexible than
others. Stretching exercises (and the thrill of grossing
people out) often promote the development of this special
talent.

(Main Source: THE BOOK OF TOTALLY USELESS INFORMATION By Don Vorhees)


What animal had the longest neck of all?

The longest known neck was that of the dinosaur Mamenchisaurus. Its neck could be as long as 15 meters (49 feet), two and a half times as long as a giraffe's neck. The whole dinosaur could be as long as 26 meters (85 feet) and might weigh as much as ten metric tons.

Mamenchisaurus necks contained 19 vertebrae, more than any other known dinosaur. A giraffe's neck contains only seven vertebrae.

Memenchisaurus was related to the Diplodocus, another huge dinosaur. Both were herbivores that used their long necks to get at vegetation without having to move their bodies very much. Mamenchisaurus lived during the late Jurassic Period, about 140 million years ago.

More about Memenchisaurus:
http://www.nature.ca/notebooks/english/mamenchi.htm

Previous Cool Facts about unusual necks:

http://www.cool-fact.com/archive/1997/12/18.html
http://www.cool-fact.com/archive/1998/05/13.html
http://www.cool-fact.com/archive/1998/05/20.html


What's with the British? Don't they know that the letter Z is pronounced "zee" not "zed"?

The British may be wrong about a lot of things (just look at what they eat), but they're right about this one. Z's pronunciation comes from the original Greek "zeta" via the Old French "zede" and English speakers throughout the world pronounce it that way.

Americans don't because we got into a fight with the British a couple of hundred years ago. After the Revolution, we adapted the infrequently used pronunciation "zee," which seems to be imitative of bee, dee, vee, etc.

But don't worry fellow Americans, we have a secret weapon for converting the rest of the world: Television. By sneaking the alphabet song in every children's TV show that we export to the rest of the world, we'll teach them to be just as wrong as we are.

(Main Source: THE AMERICAN HERITAGE DICTIONARY)



What's the most powerful kind of light microscope?

The light microscope that can see the smallest details is the laser scanning confocal microscope (LSCM). It's a sophisticated combination of a laser, a computer, and advanced optics.

The LSCM eliminates one of the biggest sources of optical "noise" in ordinary microscopes: light from parts of the image that are not in focus. Instead of creating the whole image all at once, a confocal microscope aims a tiny spot of light at the subject, scanning it like the beam of electrons used in a scanning electron microscope.

The result is an image that shows much smaller details than traditional light microscope images. There are other devices, like electron microscopes, which achieve much greater magnification than the LSCM. Nevertheless, LSCM images sometimes show information that is impossible to see with any other microscope.

Galleries of confocal images:
http://www.neuro.soton.ac.uk/BIG/Pretty_Pictures/pretty.pictures.html
http://www.is.kochi-u.ac.jp/Bio/clsm/clsm.html

More about how it works:
http://www.llt.de/conprin.html


Why is it called Scotland Yard if it's not in Scotland?

The headquarters of the London Metropolitan Police has never been in Scotland. Scotland Yard is known throughout the world for its skill and crime solving technique - can it be that their renowned detectives don't even know where they work?

This one is elementary, my dear reader. The London Metropolitan Police began in 1829 and had its original headquarters at Number 4 Whitehall Place--right next door to the buildings that used to house kings and other important visitors from Scotland.

The surrounding area came to be known as Scotland Yard and the name stuck to the police facility, even after the police moved to new offices (dubbed "New Scotland Yard") in 1890. New Scotland Yard moved in 1967 to the Westminster section of London, where it remains to this day.

(Main Source: 1997 World Book Encyclopedia)




Fast Facts

The London Metropolitan Police was founded by Sir Robert Peel. Ever since, police officers have been called "bobbies", after Sir Robert's nickname.

Bonus Fact #2: Even though it's one of his most famous quotes, Sherlock Holmes never said "Elementary, my dear Watson."


Do rocks from Mars fall onto the Earth?

Analysis of the chemical composition of some meteorites suggests that they may be pieces of the planet Mars. They were probably thrown into space during large asteroid impacts on Mars, and may have spent millions of years in orbit before falling onto the Earth.

In 1996 tiny fossil-like structures, smaller than bacteria, were discovered inside one of these Mars rocks. There is debate about whether these cylindrical capsules were once living cells.

Is there life on Mars? The presence on Earth of Martian meteorites may have given us a rare, close-up look at Martian chemistry, but we still have no certain answers about Martian life forms.

More about the meteorites from Mars, and the controversial "fossils":
http://seti1.setileague.org/photos/marspix.htm
http://cnn.com/TECH/9608/06/mars.life/
http://www.fas.org/mars/aaas_001.htm

A previous Cool Fact about Mars:
http://www.cool-fact.com/archive/1997/06/24.html


What does the US Postal Service do with mail it can't deliver?

In researching this answer, I found a job that I would like to do almost as much as I like writing trivia. Any mail that is improperly addressed or otherwise undeliverable is sent to a "dead letter" office if the outer envelope doesn't have a return address on it. There, a Postal employee opens the envelope and checks out the contents.
I'm so curious, I would love to open other people's mail for a living.

If there's no indication on the inside of the letter of who sent it to whom , it is immediately destroyed. If the envelope contains anything of value, the contents are usually retained for about 90 days in case someone is trying to find them. Any unclaimed items are auctioned off to the public, and cash is placed into a general fund.
Money that remains abandoned after 1 year is rolled over into a general account to be used by the Postal Service however they see fit.

(Source: DO PENGUINS HAVE KNEES? By David Feldman)



Fast facts

I can melt metal with my bare hands. (As long as the metal is gallium, which melts at 86 degrees Fahrenheit.)

Americans love their pets. Every year, they spend four times as much on pet food as they do on baby food.


Why does a hurricane have a calm "eye" in the center?

The eye of a hurricane is the inescapable result of the laws of physics. No matter how strong the rotating winds are around the center, there must always be a point where there is no wind at all. That point, and a circular region around it, is the eye. Sometimes the sky in the eye is clear and blue, or stars may be visible if it's night.

A hurricane's eye is surrounded by a circular wall of boiling clouds.
The cloud wall marks the sudden transition between the raging winds and relative calm. Air pressure in a hurricane's eye is very low, often lower than any (sea-level) pressures outside of such storms.

Although we know there must be an eye, there are many unanswered questions. Why is the eye so sharply defined? Why is there a downdraft in most eyes? How can a storm's eye develop two concentric cloud walls, and why does the storm often weaken immediately afterwards?

Here's some great writing about hurricane Hugo (South Carolina, 1989):
http://www2.sptimes.com/weather/HG.6.html

Other Cool Facts about thunderstorms and hurricanes:
http://www.cool-fact.com/archive/1998/10/29.html
http://www.cool-fact.com/archive/1999/01/11.html


Why does inhaling helium make your voice sound funny?

This party stunt almost never fails to amuse when it gives
a chipmunk-like voice to even the most masculine man. I've
often wondered who originated this stunt, and what else did
they suck up in their quest for the funny voice?

The secret to this trick lies in the fact that helium is
less dense than air. The less dense the medium, the faster
your vocal chords will vibrate, in this case making your
voice sound higher pitched. A lower pitch can be achieved
by inhaling a gas that's heavier than air, such as xenon,
but a party decorated with xenon filled balloons doesn't
sound as fun.

(Main Source: DO PENGUINS HAVE KNEES? By David Feldman)


Did pirates really make people walk the plank?

This remains one of the most popular images associated with pirates, along with peg legs, eye patches and parrots. But there is only one single report of plank walking that historians are aware of, from around the year 1700. So while it does make for an exciting movie scene, it doesn't appear to have been a common form of punishment or entertainment for bullying buccaneers.

This is not to say that pirates were pleasant people. Their enemies ended up in watery graves, but the pirates were more likely to just toss them overboard than bother with the plank. Other executions were similarly efficient and didn't typically involve gratuitous cruelty. Even when torture was employed, it was usually to find out where the loot was hidden rather than for the sheer fun of it.

(Main Source: DID MOHAWKS WEAR MOHAWKS? By Bruce Tindall and Mark Watson)


What kind of spider catches flying insects without using a web?

The arboreal (tree-climbing) tarantula, Avicula versicolor, is so fast that it can grab flying insects right out of the air. It is one of
the few spiders that can do this without using a web.

A. versicolor is found on Martinique and Guadeloupe islands. It's a huge, furry, red and brown spider that can jump rapidly and accurately among the tree branches where it lives. Like most tarantulas it has excellent eyesight, with full stereo vision.

If it sees a flying insect it springs at it, in an act of exquisite
timing and precision, and snatches it right out of the air. Dinner
is served!

Tarantulas are among the most intelligent arthropods:
http://www.image.dk/~boston/edderdyr/


Why do we knock on wood for luck?

Believing the old proverb, "He who talks much of happiness, summons grief," many people knock on wood to ward off evil.
This superstition goes back to pagan times, when people believed that trees were the god's abode. To touch a tree was to show respect to the gods.

The superstition was reinforced in people's minds by Jesus' crucifixion. Since Jesus was crucified on a wooden cross, many people believed that all wood was holy. Some even wore
wooden crucifixes and touched them penitently when they caught themselves gloating.

(Source: Every Wonder Why? by Douglas B. Smith)


When was the first meeting between Europeans and Native Americans?

Columbus was not the first European to meet Native American people. A much earlier meeting happened when Viking explorers landed in the extreme northeast of North America, around the year 1000.

The landing was part of a great exploratory wave, when the Vikings sailed all around the north Atlantic visiting Iceland, Greenland, and northern North America. They found these lands almost entirely uninhabited.

There are two stories from the 13th and 14th centuries, written records of much older orally transmitted tales, that tell the story of their encounters with Native Americans. They are "The Saga of Erik the Red," and "The Saga of the Greenlanders," both about the explorer Erik the Red and his son, Leif Eriksson.

The Vikings were bold explorers:
http://www.nmnh.si.edu/arctic/features/viking/

A previous Cool Fact about Vikings:
http://www.cool-fact.com/archive/1997/03/02.html


How did fake fossils fool a university professor?

A fossil hoax known as "Beringer's Autographed Stones" was so successful that a university professor published a book about the fake fossils.

In the early 18th century fossils were still a matter of considerable debate among geologists. Dr. Hohann Bartholemew Adam Beringer, of the medical faculty at Wuerzberg, held the view that fossils were mostly not the remains of animals, but rather the handiwork of God, made to please Him.

Two men who disagreed with his views carved various shapes into stones and planted them at Beringer's favorite digging site. Beringer believed these fake fossils to be produced by the direct intervention of God, and as the hoaxers planted more and more preposterous fakes, Beringer became even more excited.

The hoax was eventually revealed, and Beringer was so embarrassed that he bought back as many copies of his book as he could find, at great expense.

The hoax ruined the reputations of everyone involved:
http://www.lhup.edu/~dsimanek/berstone.htm


Is one dog year really equal to seven human years?

One year may FEEL like seven to your dog if you're dressing him up like a baby and pushing him around in a carriage, but that's the closest you can come to making the seven year rule true. Originally a dog food marketing ploy, this common misconception is flawed in two important ways.

First, and I hope this doesn't come as a shock to you, dogs develop differently than people. For instance, many puppies reach their adult height by six months of age, which in human years would make for some very dangerous toddlers.

Second, dogs mature at different rates. With over 130 breeds recognized by the American Kennel Club weighing in at anywhere from one pound to two hundred, it's easy to see why no hard and fast rule can be applied. If you really need to compare Rover to your kids, some scientists believe that 4 to 6 years per human year is a little more accurate.

(Main Source: THE COLLEGE OF OBSCURE KNOWLEDGE By Jim Marbles)


Why is caviar so expensive?

What makes a tin of this stuff possibly the most expensive six-letter answer in a crossword puzzle ("champagne and _ _ _ _ _ _ ")? It has to do with simple old economics. Caviar is relatively scarce and difficult to process. 

The sturgeon, from which true caviar comes, takes from 8 to 15 years to mature. This ain't no chicken that keeps on giving. Maturity is the only point at which the eggs can be harvested. You catch the fish, cut it open and take the eggs. 
At every step, the eggs must be slowly hand-processed by an expert, who can tell just how much salt to add. Bad eggs, with an off-smell or color, must be thrown out, sometimes significantly diminishing the total harvest.

So what will it be, Beluga on toast points or the down payment on a Lexus? 

Source: HOW DO THEY DO THAT? By Caroline Sutton




Didja Know...
Termites eat wood twice as fast when listening to heavy metal music?
(Source: funtrivia.com)


Okey dokey

It's a hard life and a tough world, so when nature itself provides soothing reassurance that all is well, we should be grateful. The source of this reassuring message is found in a lizard native to Southeast Asia. It's the bluish-gray, red-spotted gecko, whose call on quiet evenings can be heard quite distinctly: "TO-kay! TO-kay!"

If it's TO-kay with you, it's TO-kay with me.

Source: JUST CURIOUS JEEVES



How loud are a bat's echolocation calls?

Although we can't hear the sounds a bat makes as it flies around in the dark because they are too high-pitched, they are still sounds and instruments can measure their loudness.

The loudest bats are those that usually fly in wide-open spaces. These include the common brown bat, which can be seen on summer evenings in temperate regions, flying above the treetops. These are "shouters" whose calls are sometimes as loud as a household smoke alarm (about 110 decibels). Even at that intensity, their ultrasonic calls fade out at about 50 feet because air does not carry ultrasound very well.

Quieter bats are those that fly in tighter spaces like between the trees in a forest. These "whispering" bats have calls measuring about 60 decibels, the loudness of human conversation.

A bat's sense of echolocation can be almost as accurate as our vision:
http://www.batcon.org/seedark.html

More than a million bats visit Austin, Texas every year:
http://features.LearningKingdom.com/fact/archive/1998/01/08.html


Where was the first geothermal electricity generated?

In 1904, the world's first geothermal electric generator went into operation at Italy's Larderello Hot Springs. Using pressurized steam from underground, the original plant was able to generate about 250 kilowatts, barely enough to run one modern home.

Electricity was not the first use of the hot springs at Larderello. Hot water was used in 1777,and starting in 1790 brine from the springs was processed to extract boric acid and other compounds of boron.

Today, Larderello has 300 wells as deep as 700 meters (2300 feet), which yield ultra-hot water at 235 degrees Celsius (455 F) and a pressure of 30 atmospheres. The site now produces 300-400 megawatts of power.

More about geothermal energy and how it is used:
http://geothermal.marin.org/pwrheat.html
http://wwwphys.murdoch.edu.au/acre/refiles/geo/text.html

Another place where geothermal energy is important:
http://features.LearningKingdom.com/fact/archive/1997/05/02.html

Why do we use alternating current (AC) electricity?
http://features.LearningKingdom.com/fact/archive/1999/10/14.html


How electric are electric eels?

Electrophorus electrcus, the electric eel, is nature's own EE battery. You would only want to meet it in the abstract, in print, rather than in its native habitat, the Amazon River Basin in South America. That's because it can deliver up to 600 volts of electricity when disturbed--one heck of a hissy fit.

This fish is not really an eel, a technicality that would mean little to you if you made contact with it. The electric eel generates its charge by the difference in electrical potential between the solutions inside and outside the nerve cells in its tail, which makes up 4/5 of its length. That charge is applied to thousands of tiny cells at its nerve endings along the tail. The creature controls the strength of the charge by timing its nerve impulses. Touch it at the wrong time and it will turn your lights off.

(Source: ENCYCLOPEDIA BRITANNICA)




FAST FACTS:

Patrick Henry had a total of 17 children. He had the distinction of being elected of the first governor of Virginia. Of course, he was, he was responsible for populating most of the state.

Patrick Henry was famous for the quote "Give me liberty or give me death." With 17 kids, either one was better than having to go home.

(Source: KID'S 20TH CENTURY QUESTIONS & ANSWERS BOOK)


What kind of zoo keeps its animals in liquid nitrogen?

All around the world, zoos are busy creating frozen collections of tissue samples from hundreds of species of life, including animals, plants, and other life forms. These "frozen zoos" could be vital resources in the future if any of these species become extinct.

With the current rate of species extinction between 1,000 and 10,000 times the natural "background" level and still increasing, it is critical that we preserve the genetic information of as many life forms as possible. While we do not yet have the ability to create cloned animals or plants from many of the samples, it seems likely that in the future we will.

If we can get past the immediate crisis, then the frozen zoos may provide the DNA we will need to reconstruct many of the missing species and perhaps rebuild some of the vanished ecosystems.

Betsy Dresser is one scientist who is building a frozen zoo:
http://future.newsday.com/4/fmon0412.htm
http://www.usnews.com/usnews/issue/000103/dresser.htm
http://www.the-scientist.library.upenn.edu/yr1991/may/eisner_p1_910527.html

Zoos have changed a lot since the first menageries:
http://features.LearningKingdom.com/fact/archive/2000/05/11.html


When was money first used?

If money is a physical object traded as standard tokens of value, then the first money was being used by 9,000 BC in the middle east and Africa, where cattle and measures of grain were exchanged as standard units for other items like food, raw materials, land, or wives.

Among the first objects specially created as value tokens were coils of cast silver "ring money" that were used in Mesopotamia as early as 2,500 BC. These bits of silver were weighed in shekels, the world's first standard units of measure.

The first coins were circulated in Lydia in 687 BC, according to Herodotus. Although the Chinese may have used paper money for a short time in the same century, the first western use of paper money was not until the 18th century, by the French.

How did the invention of money change civilization?
http://www.discover.com/oct_issue/cradle.html

Coins and money systems in ancient Greece and Rome:
http://www.columbia.edu/~rcc20/romans/money.html

Mesopotamia's standard units of weight and measure:
http://features.LearningKingdom.com/fact/archive/1999/01/29.html


Did anyone invent ice cream?

Clearly it was not one person who created this gift to humanity, for surely he or she would have already been awarded the Nobel Prize. Short of world peace and cures for terrible diseases, what better mark of progress and civilization could there be than the advent of ice cream in general and, if I may say so, chocolate ice cream in particular?

Ice cream debuted in China 4000 years ago among the nobility in the form of a milk and rice concoction packed in snow. Fruit ices and a form of sherbet followed. In the Middle Ages travelers brought these treats back to Italy, where it was
still a dessert reserved for the upper crust. Improved cheaper refrigeration techniques in the 16th century brought ice cream to the masses, probably the most important dot on the timeline of history until the discovery of antibiotics 400 years later.

(Source: EXTRAORDINARY ORIGINS OF EVERYDAY THINGS)




FAST FACTS:

The dust bowl was a series of dust storms that swept through the Midwest in the 1930's that destroyed crops and killed livestock. I have the same experience every time I clean under my bed.

Orville Wright was at the controls during the Wright Brothers famous flight. The flight lasted only 12 seconds. It's hard to pilot a plane where you have someone behind you saying, "If you don't let me steer I'm going to tell mom."

(Source: KID'S 20TH CENTURY QUESTIONS & ANSWERS BOOK)


How do forest workers in Bengal protect against tigers?

The mangrove forests of the Sunderbans in West Bengal, India are home to deadly Bengal tigers, which are easily able to kill a human. Yet hunters, woodcutters, and honey gatherers often enter these swampy forests. How do they protect themselves?

Each person who enters the Sunderbans wears a rubber mask of a human face on the back of his or her head. The belief is that the tiger will only attack its prey from behind. If it can see your face, it will not attack.

The masks, issued by the government, are part of a larger program that includes the placement of electrified human dummies and the construction of freshwater ponds to keep the tigers out of the rivers, where people are often attacked.

The Sunderbans is one of the few places where the tiger population is growing:
http://www.csmonitor.com/durable/1998/02/25/intl/intl.1.html

More about Bengal tigers:
http://the-planet.net/co/animal/Btiger.html

A reptilian tiger-equivalent that lived 260 million years ago:
http://features.LearningKingdom.com/fact/archive/1999/02/10.html


Why do we call that British accent Cockney?

In the U.S. an accent or dialect identifies the geographical place from which you come, while on the other side of the pond it can also mark your social place. The Cockney dialect, for instance, identifies the speaker as hailing from a certain section of London. But it is also something more.

The word Cockney comes from cock's egg, an egg with no yolk and thus worthless. It first meant a spoiled child or young
man--a dandy--then any young person from a town, who was presumably weaker than the heartier youth hailing from the countryside. Finally it designated residents of a particular working class area of London, an example of how in a class-conscious society, money can literally talk.

(Source: WORD & PHRASE ORIGINS by W. & M. Morris)



What year was missing ten days in October?

In 1582 Pope Gregory decreed that October's dates would skip from the fourth to the fifteenth, dropping ten days. The reason for this seemingly strange act had to do with the calendar system that was in use at the time.

Unlike our current system, the old Julian calendar had a leap year every four years without exception. Because a year is really a fraction shorter than 365.25 days, tiny errors began to accumulate. By the time of Pope Gregory's decree, the calendar was adjusted by ten days compared to Earth's solar year.

When he issued his decree, Gregory also fixed the leap year rule, so that leap years do not occur on century years (divisible by 100), unless the year is also divisible by 400. There is one other exception: years divisible by 4000 are not leap years. For example, 1900 was not a leap year, but 2000 is one.

More about calendar adjustments and leap years:
http://www.digtl.com/leapyr.htm

A suggestion for an even more accurate system:
http://www.greenheart.com/billh/leapyear.html

What clock measures time in thousands of years?
http://features.LearningKingdom.com/fact/archive/1998/12/18.html

What's the most accurate clock in the world?
http://features.LearningKingdom.com/fact/archive/2000/02/02.html


How do they choose a new Pope?

The Pope is chosen by the College of Cardinals, the members
of which meet, pray, deliberate and vote in the Sistine Chapel in the Vatican. Their conclave is all work and no play. By tradition the Cardinals are isolated from the outside world and swear an oath of secrecy because in the Middle Ages secular rulers tried to influence their deliberations. Their living accommodations and even their food are kept plain because a conclave centuries ago turned boisterous.

The winning candidate must receive one more than a two-thirds majority. When a vote does not produce a clear choice, the ballots are burned with a chemical that produces black smoke.
The ballots that finally produce a Pope are burned to produce a white smoke. Isn't that charming! In the age of the Internet, the results of the world's most important election are conveyed to the outside world by smoke signals.

(Source: HOW DO THEY DO THAT? by Caroline Sutton)





FAST FACTS:

An elephant's tusks are actually teeth - the largest belonging to any animal. The largest tusk ever found topped the scales at 258 pounds and was more than10 feet long

(Source: READER'S DIGEST BOOK OF FACTS)

 

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